Kuwait Times

Maturing oyster recovery projects bring calls for money

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Oysters were once so abundant in New Jersey that vacationer­s would clamber off trains, wade into the water and pluck handfuls to roast for dinner. Their colonies piled so high that boats would sometimes run aground on them, and they were incorporat­ed into navigation maps. Even earlier, Native American tribes would have oyster feasts on the banks of coastal inlets. But over the centuries, rampant developmen­t, pollution, overharves­ting and disease drasticall­y reduced the number of oysters, here and around the country; many researcher­s and volunteer groups estimate oyster population­s are down 85 percent from their levels in the 1800s.

That has sparked efforts throughout the coastal United States to establish new oyster colonies, or fortify struggling ones. Though small in scale, the efforts are numerous and growing, and they have a unified goal: showing that oysters can be successful­ly restored in the wild, paving the way for largerscal­e efforts and the larger funding they will require. While a main goal is increasing the numbers of succulent, salty shellfish bound for dinner plates, oysters also serve other useful purposes. They improve water quality; a single oyster can filter up to 50 gallons of water a day.

They also can protect coastlines; the hard, irregular oyster beds serve as speed bumps that obstruct waves during storms. “It’s many years and millions of dollars away, but it is attainable,” said Steve Evert, assistant director of the Marine Science and Environmen­tal Field Station at New Jersey’s Stockton University, one of hundreds of organizati­ons working to start or expand oyster colonies. Most of the projects are small-scale, funded by government grants and volunteer donations. Helen Henderson, of New Jersey’s American Littoral Society, which is growing an oyster reef in Barnegat Bay, hopes successful demonstrat­ion projects can lead to an exponentia­l increase in funding for bigger projects.

“Nature has shown us this can be done; we’re just giving it a kick-start,” she said. “Hopefully funding will flow from that once we can show successful outcomes, and we can really make a difference on a much larger scale.”The Barnegat Bay Partnershi­p put up $52,000 for the oyster project Stockton is undertakin­g in New Jersey; matching funds came from the university, the Littoral Society, and a shellfish business that has invested many times that amount on equipment and oyster seedlings. Fledgling oysters need to attach themselves to a hard surface in order to grow, preferably a three-dimensiona­l one with plenty of nooks and crannies.

Dumping shells

The projects usually involve dumping shells onto the sea bed, where free-floating oyster seed attaches to them, though some projects pre-load the shells with tiny oyster seedlings before dumping them at a reef site. Some involve transporti­ng more mature oysters from establishe­d colonies to new sites. Oyster restoratio­n projects are underway or have recently been completed in San Francisco Bay; Puget Sound near Seattle; New York Harbor and the Hudson River; in coastal salt ponds in Rhode Island and the state’s Narraganse­tt Bay; in the Carolinas, as well as Florida and the other Gulf Coast states; New Hampshire; and particular­ly in Chesapeake Bay in Maryland and Virginia, where some of the nation’s biggest oyster restoratio­n programs have been underway for years.

In 2014, US fishermen and growers produced nearly 36 million pounds of oysters worth nearly $250 million, according to the National Marine Fisheries Service. But oyster landings have plummeted from their heyday in the 1800s. In Chesapeake Bay, 120 million pounds of oysters were brought ashore in 1880; by 2008, the amount was around 1 to 2 million, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

“We’ve knocked this resource down so far that it would be impossible to get it back to 100 percent of its historic high,” said Bill Goldsborou­gh of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. — AP

 ??  ?? Nate Robinson (left) and Dave Ambrose dump whelk shells with tiny oysters growing on them onto a research boat in Little Egg Harbor, NJ. — AP
Nate Robinson (left) and Dave Ambrose dump whelk shells with tiny oysters growing on them onto a research boat in Little Egg Harbor, NJ. — AP

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